TY - CHAP
T1 - Continuing Conflict and International Prices of Commodities: Theory and empirical Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa
AU - Caruso, Raul
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - This chapter presents first a theoretical model of conflict between two
agents characterised by a two-sector economy. In a contested sector, two
agents struggle to appropriate the maximum possible fraction of a
contestable output. In an uncontested sector, they hold secure property
rights over the production of some goods. Agents split their resource
endowment between ‘butter’, ‘guns’ and ‘ice-cream’. Eventually, tradable
goods made of both butter and ice-cream produced by conflicting parties
are sold to the rest of the world. Therefore, the opportunity cost of conflict depends also on the relative profitability of contested and uncontested
production. In particular, productivity of uncontested production and
profitability of contested sectors are countervailing forces. The empirical
section focused on a panel of Sub-Saharan African countries for the
period 1995–2006. Results are not fully conclusive. However, there is
robust evidence that prices of manufactures (interpreted as the
uncontested ice-cream) are negatively associated with the likelihood of
a civil war. Eventually, international price of manufactures is also
associated with a higher GDP per capita growth rate. The concluding
remark seems to be that an increase in world prices of manufactures
would make civil wars less likely.
AB - This chapter presents first a theoretical model of conflict between two
agents characterised by a two-sector economy. In a contested sector, two
agents struggle to appropriate the maximum possible fraction of a
contestable output. In an uncontested sector, they hold secure property
rights over the production of some goods. Agents split their resource
endowment between ‘butter’, ‘guns’ and ‘ice-cream’. Eventually, tradable
goods made of both butter and ice-cream produced by conflicting parties
are sold to the rest of the world. Therefore, the opportunity cost of conflict depends also on the relative profitability of contested and uncontested
production. In particular, productivity of uncontested production and
profitability of contested sectors are countervailing forces. The empirical
section focused on a panel of Sub-Saharan African countries for the
period 1995–2006. Results are not fully conclusive. However, there is
robust evidence that prices of manufactures (interpreted as the
uncontested ice-cream) are negatively associated with the likelihood of
a civil war. Eventually, international price of manufactures is also
associated with a higher GDP per capita growth rate. The concluding
remark seems to be that an increase in world prices of manufactures
would make civil wars less likely.
KW - commodity prices
KW - conflict
KW - commodity prices
KW - conflict
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/31168
UR - http://dx.medra.org/10.1108/s1572-8323(2011)0000017006
U2 - 10.1108/S1572-8323(2011)0000017006
DO - 10.1108/S1572-8323(2011)0000017006
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781780521305
VL - 17
SP - 23
EP - 49
BT - Ethnic Conflict, Civil War and Cost of Conflict
A2 - CARUSO, RAUL
ER -